<Anchor> The



victims of forced mobilization protested strongly as you saw earlier, saying that what the government came up with today (the 12th) is a plan in which Japan does not bear any burden.

Nevertheless, if the government continues to push, it has warned that it will continue to fight in court again.



Reporter Kim Ah-young will continue to report the victim's reaction.



<Reporter>



In 2019, the solution to compensation for forced labor proposed by then National Assembly Speaker Hee-sang Moon was called the so-called 2+2 solution.



It was a method in which the governments and companies of both Korea and Japan participated to create a fund and compensate the victims through this.



On the other hand, the victims' organizations judge that today's government plan is the same as the plan in which only the Korean government and Korean companies participate without Japan participating.



[Park Hong-gyu/Professor, Korea University (Expert Panel): You shouldn't have expectations for things like Japan's apology and participation in the fund.

(What nonsense are you talking about? Stop it.) The truth is…

.]



[Lim Jae-seong/Victim's legal representative: It's '2+0', but Japan doesn't bear any burden, but the victim's side is so strongly opposed to it.

.]



The Korean government's position is that it will urge a sincere response to Japanese companies' apology and participation in compensation.



But maybe that's just wishful thinking.



Victims' organizations exploded in anger, saying that Japan promised to inform that Gunhamdo was a labor site at the time of UNESCO registration in 2015, but has not yet kept it.



[Lee Guk-eon/Chief of the Citizens' Group for Forced Mobilization under Japanese Occupation: There is not a single document in the yard that even the agreement is overturned overnight, and Korea unilaterally announces it, but will Japan respond later?

How can you do such a thing unless you know the people as fools?]



The government announced that it would continue a court battle if the government pushes through with the overlapping debt takeover despite the victims' objections.



(Video coverage: Jo Chun-dong · Yang Doo-won, video editing: Park Ki-duk)



▶ Japan "No compensation, no apology"...

Are corporate donations acceptable?


▶ Despite the victim's opposition, it is virtually finished...

Why is the government in a hurry?